Trustnet Magazine Issue 23 November 2016 | Page 10

YOUR PORTFOLIO / VICES / CIGARETTES & ALCOHOL A spectacular financial incentive to quit drinking and smoking awaits anyone willing to invest the money they would have spent on these vices into the companies that profit from them, writes Anthony Luzio 8 trustnetdirect.com W hen a 22-year-old Liam Gallagher sang “all I need is cigarettes and alcohol” in Oasis’s 1994 single of the same name, he was articulating an outlook on life common among people of this age – living for the day. After all, talking to someone who is barely out of their teens about the importance of making regular contributions to fund their retirement is likely to elicit a look of contempt before they return to a more pressing concern – making the most of their youth. However, time has a habit of catching up with you much faster than you expect and the feeling of immortality you may have had in your early 20s can give way to a feeling of despair when you wake up one day and realise you are now closer to retirement age than to your teenage years, with the gap widening all the time. You can at least cross off one item from your list of worries if you have been sensible with your finances and put a small amount away each month for a rainy day. Unfortunately, this is not a situation Liam Gallagher finds himself in. While Oasis have been one of the most successful UK rock bands of the past 20 years, selling more than 70 million records, it is Gallagher’s brother Noel as the songwriter who receives the lion’s share of the royalties. And while in 2011, website Celebrity Net Worth trustnetdirect.com Assuming he smoked 20 a day, Liam Gallagher would have spent £43,422.15 on cigarettes since 1994 estimated the younger of the two brothers had made £50m over the course of his career, when he divorced Nicole Appleton last year, the judge in the case estimated he had just £11m to be split with his ex-wife. Of course, rock stars have a hedonistic reputation to maintain and Gallagher admits his cost of living has taken its toll, particularly when touring. As he put it in a 2013 interview with NME: “I don’t go on the road to come back with a big pot of money. I go on the road to have a good time, do great gigs and enjoy being in a band. And that means staying in good hotels and flying business class.” “I don’t want a f*****g Mini picking me up at the airport, I want a nice f*****g car picking me up, and if I come back and I’ve made no money on that tour because it’s all been spent, then I’m happy with that.” CUTTING BACK If Gallagher did want to cut back on his cost of living, a good place to start would be two of the vices that made him successful in the first place: cigarettes and alcohol. Take cigarettes to start with. Data from the Tobacco Manufacturers’ Association shows that the average price of a pack of cigarettes has almost quadrupled in the 22 years since Oasis released the single Cigarettes and Alcohol, from £2.52 in 1994 to £9.60 today. Assuming Gallagher smoked 20 a day, he would have spent £43,422.15 on cigarettes from the start of 1994 up until the present day. In terms of alcohol, data from the Office for National Statistics shows the average price of a pint of lager has increased from £1.58 in 1994 to £3.47 in 2016, an increase of 120 per cent. Assuming Gallagher drank an average of five pints every day from 1994 – admittedly this is more than three times the recommended amount for adult males, but rock stars aren’t exactly famed for moderation – he would have spent £103,312.5 on beer. WHERE BETTER TO INVEST? Added together, the amount Gallagher would have saved from abstaining from these two vices over the past 22 years stands at £146,734.65. However, sitting on a large amount of money over such a lengthy period of time is never a good idea when you can put it to work in markets, and what 9